‘The translation is throughout felicitous, and the author’s style engaging, with frequent touches of irony.’ <br /><i><b></b></i><b>- Norman Solomon,</b><i><b> Jewish Journal of Sociology</b></i>
‘Halperin’s detailed introduction and his numerous philological, theological, and historical annotations permit the reader to gain a thorough understanding of each text. In addition, he offers a short general introduction in which he contests Scholem’s conviction that Lurianic Kabbalah constituted “the normative theology of seventeenth-century Judaism”.’<br /><i><b></b></i><b>- Federica dal Bo,</b><i><b> Journal of Jewish Studies</b></i>
‘The aim of David Halperin for this book is to permit the reader to experience [Sabbatai Zevi’s] life through the eyes of contemporaries, some rabidly supportive and some not so. This book certainly has met thus challenge . . . Halperin does an excellent job in permitting us into a world that would not be accessible to most of us in a work that has taken years to produce. He uses his pedagogic skills well. We are products of the paths of so many that came before us, and he helps us understand a bit better from where we come.’ <br /><i><b></b></i><b>- Bob Nussenblatt, </b><i><b>La Lettre Sépharade</b></i>